Optical component quartz glass

ABSTRACT

Starting from an optical component of quartz glass for transmitting ultraviolet radiation of a wavelength between 190 nm and 250 nm, with a glass structure essentially without oxygen defects, a hydrogen content ranging from 0.1×10 16  molecules/cm 3  to 5.0×10 16  molecules/cm 3 , and with a content of SiH groups of less than 5×10 16  molecules/cm 3 , to provide such a component which is particularly well suited for use with linearly polarized UV laser radiation, the present invention suggests that the component should have a content of hydroxyl groups ranging from 10 to 250 wt ppm and a fictive temperature above 1000° C.

The present invention relates to an optical component of quartz glassfor transmitting ultraviolet radiation of a wavelength between 190 nmand 250 nm with a glass structure essentially without oxygen defects, ahydrogen content ranging from 0.1×10¹⁶ molecules/cm³ to 5.0×10¹⁶molecules/cm³ and a content of SiH groups of <5×10¹⁶ molecules/cm³.

Furthermore, the present invention relates to a method for producingsuch an optical component of quartz glass, and to the use thereof.

Methods for producing synthetic quartz glass by oxidation or by flamehydrolysis of silicon-containing start substances are generally knownunder the names VAD (vapor-phase axial deposition), OVD (outside vaporphase deposition), MCVD (modified chemical vapor deposition) and PCVD(or also PECVD; plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition) methods. Inall of these procedures SiO₂ particles are normally produced by means ofa burner and deposited in layers on a carrier which is moved relative toa reaction zone. At a sufficiently high temperature in the area of thecarrier surface, “direct vitrification” of the SiO₂ particles takesplace. By contrast, in the so-called “soot method” the temperature is solow during deposition of the SiO₂ particles that a porous soot layer isobtained which is sintered in a separate step of the method to obtaintransparent quartz glass. Both direct vitrification and soot methodproduce a dense transparent synthetic quartz glass of high purity in theform of rods, blocks, tubes or plates, which are further processed intooptical components such as lenses, windows, filters, mask plates foruse, for instance, in microlithography.

EP-A 401 845 describes methods for producing plate-shaped quartz glassblanks by direct vitrification and according to the soot method. Toreduce mechanical stresses inside the blanks and to achieve ahomogeneous distribution of the fictive temperature, the blanks arenormally annealed with great care. An annealing program is suggested inwhich the blank is subjected to a holding time of 50 hours at atemperature of about 1100° C. and is subsequently cooled in a slowcooling step at a cooling rate of 2°/h to 900° and then cooled in theclosed furnace to room temperature.

A similar method for producing a component of synthetic quartz glass foruse in microlithography according to the soot method is also known formEP 1 125 897 A1.

A quartz glass blank for an optical component of the above-mentionedtype is described in DE 101 59 961 C2. Such optical components of quartzglass are used for transmitting high-energy ultraviolet laser radiation,for instance in the form of optical exposure systems in microlithographydevices for producing large-scale integrated circuits in semiconductorchips. The exposure systems of modern microlithography devices areequipped with excimer lasers emitting high-energy pulsed UV radiation ofa wavelength of 248 nm (KrF laser) or 193 nm (ArF laser).

In microlithographic projection exposure systems the demand is ingeneral made that a light distribution provided in the area of a pupilplane of the exposure system should be transmitted as homogeneously aspossible and in an angle-maintaining manner into a pupil plane of theprojection lens conjugated relative to the pupil plane of the exposuresystem. Each change in the angular spectrum that is created in theoptical path leads to a distortion of the intensity distribution in thelens pupil, which leads to an asymmetrical irradiation and thus to adeterioration of the imaging performance. Linearly polarizing lightsources, such as excimer lasers, normally have a degree of polarizationof about 90% to 95%. With the help of a λ/4 plate the light iscircularly polarized and should ideally be maintained in this circularstate up to the wafer to be exposed.

In this context birefringence plays an important role because it impairsthe imaging fidelity of optical components of quartz glass. Stressbirefringence in the quartz glass is, for instance, created duringinhomogeneous cooling of the blank used for the optical component to beproduced, or by the UV irradiation itself.

Recently, experiments were carried out with projection systems whichoperate with a technique called “immersion lithography”. The gap betweenthe image plane and the last optical component of the lens system ishere filled with a liquid (usually deionized water) with a higherrefractive index than air, ideally with the refractive index of thequartz glass at the wavelength used. The higher refractive index of theliquid in comparison with air entails a greater numerical aperture ofthe optical component, thereby improving the imaging characteristics.“Immersion lithography” is however polarization sensitive; the bestresults will be obtained when linearly polarized laser radiation is usedand not, as is otherwise standard practice, completely or partlycircularly polarized laser radiation. It is described in “N. F. Borelli,C. M. Smith, J. J. Price, D. C. Allan “Polarized excimer laser-inducedbirefringence in silica”, Applied Physics Letters, Vol. 80, No. 2,(2002), p. 219-221” that the use of linearly polarized UV laserradiation seriously damages the glass structure of the optical quartzglass component, which will be explained in more detail in thefollowing.

The so-called “compaction” of the quartz glass after irradiation withshort-wave UV radiation is expressed in a local density increase of theglass in the irradiated volume. This leads to a locally inhomogeneousrise of the refractive index and thus to a deterioration of the imagingcharacteristics of the optical component. It has now been found thatcircularly polarized UV radiation effects a rather isotropic densitychange, and linearly polarized UV radiation a rather anisotropic densitychange. The difference will be explained with reference to FIG. 4.

The diagram of FIG. 4 a) schematically shows a volume element 40(symbolized by its position and extension along the x-axis) which isirradiated with UV radiation of an energy density of 0.08 (in relativeunits) (circular irradiation spot).

FIG. 4 b) shows the result of irradiation upon use of circularlypolarized UV radiation. After irradiation the density of the irradiatedvolume element is, on the whole, higher than the density of thesurrounding quartz glass (isotropic density change). In the area of thetransition between compacted and non-compacted material, stresses aretherefore created that are optically expressed as stress birefringence.In the two-dimensional illustration of FIG. 4 b, these stresses areillustrated around the edge of the circular irradiation spot as maxima41, 42 of the stress birefringence. In a top view on the volume element40, the maxima 41, 42 belong to a ring extending around the volume 40.Once produced, this isotropic density and refractive index change(stress birefringence) effects a change in the imaging characteristicsof the lens. Due to its circular symmetry said change, however, hassubstantially the same effect during later use of the component; it canthus be calculated.

By contrast, an irradiation of the volume element 40 with a linearlypolarized UV laser radiation effects an anisotropic density change, asoutlined in FIG. 4 c). A maximum of the density change, and thus also amaximum 43 of the birefringence generated thereby, is here produced thatshows a preferred direction in the direction of the polarization vectorof the incident UV radiation. The anisotropic density and refractiveindex change produced thereby is not substantially radially symmetricaland also effects a change in the imaging characteristics of thecomponent. This change is disadvantageous—especially upon a change inthe polarization direction of the transmitted UV radiation, which mustbe expected in the course of the lifetime of the component, because itsinfluence on imaging can hardly be calculated. Therefore, such apre-damaged quartz glass component is hardly suited for otherapplications, which limits the service life of the optical component.

It is the object of the present invention to provide an opticalcomponent which is particularly suited for use with linearly polarizedUV laser radiation, and which even after use with linearly polarizedradiation can still be used in a variable manner. Moreover, it is theobject of the present invention to indicate a method for producing suchan optical component, and a special use therefor.

As for the optical component, this object is achieved according to theinvention by an embodiment of the component which combines the followingproperties:

-   -   a glass structure essentially without oxygen defects,    -   an H₂ content ranging from 0.1×10¹⁶ molecules/cm³ to 5.0×10¹⁶        molecules/cm³,    -   a content of SiH groups of less than 5×10¹⁶ molecules/cm³,    -   a content of hydroxyl groups ranging from 10 to 250 wt ppm, and    -   a fictive temperature above 1000° C.

Ideally, the properties (fictive temperature) are constant over the usedvolume of the optical component and the indicated components are evenlydistributed. The concentration and temperatures indicated above are meanvalues within the optically used range of the component (also designatedas “CA (clear aperture) area” or “optically used volume”).

A glass structure that is substantially free from oxygen defects is hereunderstood to mean a glass structure in which the concentrations ofoxygen deficiency defects and excess oxygen defects are below thedetection limit of the method of Shelby. Said detection method ispublished in “Reaction of hydrogen with hydroxyl-free vitreous silica”(J. Appl. Phys. Vol. 51, No. 5 (May 1980), pp. 2589-2593).Quantitatively, this yields a number of oxygen deficiency defects orexcess oxygen defects in the glass structure of not more than 10¹⁷ pergram quartz glass.

The hydrogen content (H₂ content) is determined by a Raman measurement,which was first suggested by Khotimchenko et al. (“Determining theContent of Hydrogen Dissolved in Quartz Glass Using the Methods of RamanScattering and Mass Spectrometry” Zhurnal Prikladnoi Spektroskopii, Vol.46, No. 6 (June 1987), pp. 987-991).

The content of SiH groups is determined by means of Raman spectroscopy,a calibration being carried out on the basis of a chemical reaction:Si—O—Si+H₂→Si—H+Si—OH, as described in Shelby “Reaction of hydrogen withhydroxyl-free vitreous silica” (J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 51, No. 5 (May1980), pp. 2589-2593).

The hydroxyl group content (OH content) follows from a measurement ofthe IR absorption according to the method of D. M. Dodd et al. (“OpticalDeterminations of OH in Fused Silica”, p. 3911).

The fictive temperature is a parameter which characterizes the specificnetwork structure of the quartz glass. A standard measuring method fordetermining the fictive temperature by way of a measurement of the Ramanscattering intensity at a wavelength of about 606 cm⁻¹ is described in“Ch. Pfleiderer et al.: “The UV-induced 210 nm absorption band in fusedsilica with different thermal history and stoichiometry”; J. Non-Cryst.Solids 159 (1993) 145-143”.

In comparison with the quartz glass described in DE 101 59 961 C2, thequartz glass of the optical component of the invention is characterizedby a comparatively low OH content noz exceeding 250 wt ppm, andparticularly by a high fictive temperature.

Surprisingly, it has been found that an optical component made from aquartz glass having the above-indicated properties will only experiencea small anisotropic density change upon use with linearly polarized UVlaser radiation.

This is said to be due to the comparatively low hydroxyl group contentof the quartz glass and its relatively high fictive temperature. With adecreasing hydroxyl group content of a quartz glass the viscositythereof is increasing. On the other hand, it is known that quartz glass(with a high fictive temperature) which is rapidly cooled from thetemperature range between 1000° C. and 1500° C. has a lower specificvolume and thus a higher specific density than quartz glass (with a lowfictive temperature) which is cooled at a slow rate. According to “R.Brückner, Silicon Dioxide; Encyclopedia of Applied Physics, Vol. 18(1997), pp. 101-131”, this effect is due to an anomaly of syntheticquartz glass in the case of which the evolution of the specific volumein the range between 1000° and 1500° C. has a negative temperaturecoefficient, i.e., the specific volume of quartz glass increases in thistemperature range with a decreasing temperature, or in other words, thequartz glass rapidly cooled from the said temperature range and having ahigh fictive temperature has a higher density than quartz glass which iscooled at a slow rate and has a low fictive temperature. The density ofthe quartz glass which is also higher due to the higher fictivetemperature acts like an “anticipated” compaction of the glass structureon the whole. In this respect the compact network structure counteractsthe effect of a local compaction upon UV radiation. It has been foundthat the portion of a compaction that is due to an isotropic densitychange can thus be reduced, and it must be expected that this will alsoreduce the risk of an anisotropic density change with respect tolinearly polarized UV radiation.

Apart from the enhanced viscosity, the low OH content may also showanother important aspect with respect to the prevention of ananisotropic density change. It is assumed that the change in density isaccompanied by a rearrangement of hydroxyl groups, this rearrangementmechanism being all the more likely and easier the more hydroxyl groupsare available. The low hydroxyl group content and the increased density(high fictive temperature) of the quartz glass therefore reduce thesensitivity of the glass structure over a local anisotropic densitychange. The quartz glass component of the invention thus withstands thecompaction effect of UV radiation in a better way than the known quartzglass qualities, so that it is particularly well suited for use in thetransmission of linearly polarized UV radiation having a wavelength ofbetween 190 nm and 250 nm.

It has turned out to be particularly advantageous when the quartz glasshas a fictive temperature above 1050° C., preferably above 1100° C.

The higher the fictive temperature of the quartz glass, the higher isits density and the more pronounced the above-described effect of the“anticipated” compaction of the quartz glass on the whole, and thus theresistance to a local anisotropic density increase by linearly polarizedUV radiation. At very high fictive temperatures (>1200° C.) thispositive effect, however, may be impaired by excessively high andthermally created stress birefringence.

As for a high viscosity of the quartz glass, preference is given to anembodiment of the optical component in which the quartz glass has acontent of hydroxyl groups between 30 and 200 wt ppm, preferably below125 wt ppm.

The low hydroxyl group content effects an increase in viscosity. Theaccompanying improvement of the behavior over a local anisotropicdensity change is surprising insofar as it is assumed in theabove-mentioned DE 101 59 961 C2 that a quartz glass having a hydroxylgroup content of less than 125 wt ppm, as is typical of the quartz glassproduced according to the soot method, tends to compaction.

The viscosity increasing effect of the comparatively low hydroxyl groupcontent can be compensated by a high fluorine content completely or inpart. Therefore, the quartz glass for the optical component of theinvention has preferably a content of fluorine of less than 100 wt ppm.Moreover, fluorine reduces the refractive index of quartz glass so thatthe variability during use is reduced in the case of a quartz glassdoped with fluorine (≧100 wt ppm).

As for the method, the above-indicated object is achieved according tothe invention by a method comprising the following steps:

-   -   producing an SiO₂ soot body,    -   vitrifying the soot body under vacuum with formation of a        cylindrical quartz glass blank with a hydroxyl group content        ranging between 10 and 250 wt ppm, preferably between 30 and 200        wt ppm, and particularly preferably below 125 wt ppm,    -   annealing the quartz glass blank with formation of a quartz        glass cylinder, with a fictive temperature above 1000° C.,        preferably above 1050° C., and particularly preferably above        1100° C., which surrounds a contour of the optical component to        be produced with an overdimension,    -   removing part of the axial overdimension in the area of the        faces of the quartz glass cylinder,    -   loading the quartz glass cylinder with hydrogen by heating in a        hydrogen-containing atmosphere at a temperature below 500° C.        with generation of a mean hydrogen content in the range of        0.1×10¹⁶ molecules/cm³ to 5.0×10¹⁶ molecules/cm³.

“Direct vitrification” normally yields quartz glass having an OH contentof 450 to 1200 wt ppm, whereas rather low OH contents ranging between afew wt ppm and 300 wt ppm are typical of quartz glass produced accordingto the “soot method”. The quartz glass for the optical componentaccording to the invention is therefore preferably produced by means ofthe “soot method”. In this method an SiO₂ soot body is produced as anintermediate product having a hydroxyl group content that can beadjusted in a simple way to a predetermined value through the durationand intensity of a dehydration treatment.

The soot body is vitrified under vacuum with formation of a cylindricalquartz glass blank. Molecular hydrogen is removed by way of the vacuum.This hydrogen is introduced into the quartz glass during the flamehydrolysis method due to the production process and would otherwisefurther react in subsequent heat treatment steps to form undesired SiHgroups which in the course of the further treatment steps would benoticed in a disadvantageous way and would lead to a deterioration ofthe damage behavior of the quartz glass component. The vacuum serves toaccelerate the degasification operation.

After vitrification a quartz glass blank is present with a hydroxylgroup content in the range between 10 and 250 wt ppm, preferably between30 and 200 wt ppm, and particularly preferably below 125 wt ppm, and issubstantially free of SiH groups and hydrogen (the content of bothcomponents is below the detection limit).

The quartz glass blank is subsequently annealed, attention being paid tothe adjustment of a fictive temperature above 1000° C., preferably above1050° C., and particularly preferably above 1100° C. The predeterminedfictive temperature can be maintained by the measures that the quartzglass blank is held at a temperature within the range of the desiredfictive temperature until the setting of the structural balance and isthen cooled rapidly, or that the blank is cooled at a sufficiently fastrate from a temperature above the fictive temperature to be set.Attention must here be paid on the one hand that the desired highfictive temperature is maintained and that no stress birefringence isproduced on the other hand. The one precondition (high fictivetemperature) is taken into account through the lower limit of a coolingrate, and the other precondition (low stress birefringence) through acorresponding lower limit which will be explained in more detail furtherbelow.

Due to the setting of a comparatively high fictive temperature thequartz glass cylinder obtained exhibits residual stresses which areabove all noticed in the more rapidly cooling peripheral portion of thecomponent. Therefore, a portion which pertains to the overdimensionsurrounding the contour of the optical component to be produced isremoved from both faces of the cylinder. Due to the previous removal ofthis overdimension (or a part thereof), the loading duration duringsubsequent loading of the quartz glass cylinder with hydrogen isshortened, the loading duration being required for setting a meanhydrogen content ranging from 0.1×10¹⁶ molecules/cm³ to 5.0×10¹⁶molecules/cm³.

It is known that hydrogen has a healing effect with respect to defectscreated by UV irradiation in the quartz glass. In the method of theinvention, the hydrogen content is however reduced to a considerableextent, e.g. due to the above-explained vacuum treatment of the sootbody. Therefore, the quartz glass is subsequently loaded with hydrogen.Hydrogen loading takes place at a low temperature below 500° C. toreduce the formation of SiH groups. SiH groups in the quartz glass areundesired because a so-called E′ center and atomic hydrogen are formedtherefrom upon irradiation with high-energy UV light. The E′ centereffects an increased absorption at a wavelength of 210 nm and isunfavorably noticed in the adjoining UV wavelength range as well. Due tothermodynamic conditions SiH groups are increasingly formed at elevatedtemperatures (500° C.-800° C.) in the presence of hydrogen, and thecomparatively low OH content of the quartz glass also shifts the balancetowards SiH formation.

The annealing of the quartz glass blank primarily serves to reducestresses, to adjust the desired fictive temperature, and thus acompaction-resistant glass structure, and it preferably comprises thefollowing method steps:

-   -   holding the quartz glass blank for a first holding period of at        least 4 hours at a first higher annealing temperature which is        at least 50° C. above the fictive temperature of the quartz        glass component to be set,    -   cooling at a first lower cooling rate to a second lower        annealing temperature which is in the range between +/−20° C.        around the fictive temperature of the quartz glass component to        be set,    -   holding at the lower annealing temperature for a second holding        period, and    -   cooling to a predetermined final temperature below 800° C.,        preferably below 400° C., at a second higher cooling rate which        is at least 25° C./h.

It has been found that a high fictive temperature is accompanied by thegeneration of a comparatively dense network structure which counteractsa further local compaction by UV irradiation and particularly ananisotropic density change by linearly polarized UV radiation. Theabove-indicated preferred annealing program includes heating to atemperature clearly above the fictive temperature (>50° C.), cooling toa temperature in the range around the fictive temperature to be set, andthen comparatively rapid cooling of the quartz glass blank to a lowtemperature below which no essential changes in the glass structure areto be expected any more.

This is a comparatively short annealing method, which although it mightentail drawbacks with respect to stress birefringence effects anenhanced stability with respect to local compaction by UV radiation and,apart from saving time, has the further advantage that due to thecomparatively short treatment duration at a high temperature theformation of inhomogeneities due to out-diffusion of components andcontaminations by diffusing impurities are avoided.

A particularly compact network structure is obtained when the firstcooling rate is set in the range between 1° C./h and 10° C./h, andpreferably to a value in the range between 3° and 5° C./h.

As for a compact glass structure, it has also turned out to beadvantageous when the second cooling rate is set in the range between25° and 80° C./h, preferably above 40° C./h.

The faster the cooling process, the greater are the above-mentionedadvantages with respect to saving time, reduction of diffusion effectsand action of the “previously compacted” glass structure.

In a preferred embodiment of the method of the invention, the secondholding time is between 1 hour and 16 hours.

The quartz glass is once again given the opportunity to relax. Thetemperature distribution inside the quartz glass blank is homogenizedand thermal gradients that lead to stress birefringence are reduced.

In this connection and also with respect to an adjustment of a glassstructure that is as fast as possible and near the predetermined fictivetemperature, the first holding time is not more than 50 hours.

Advantageously, the quartz glass blank is loaded with hydrogen at apressure between 1 and 150 bar.

An increased pressure accelerates hydrogen loading and may also have aneffect on the density in the sense of a more compact network structurethat is more resistant to a local anisotropic density change.

For achieving a small formation of SiH groups a procedure is preferredin which the quartz glass blank is loaded with hydrogen at a temperaturebelow 400° C., preferably below 350° C.

The optical quartz glass component of the invention or the opticalcomponent produced according to the method of the invention ischaracterized by low sensitivity to a local anisotropic density changeupon irradiation with short-wave UV radiation. Therefore, it ispreferably used as an optical component in a projection system of anautomatic exposure machine for immersion lithography for the purpose oftransmitting ultraviolet, pulsed and linearly polarized UV laserradiation of a wavelength between 190 nm and 250 nm.

The quartz glass component has turned out to be particularly stable withrespect to UV laser radiation of this wavelength if it has an energydensity of less than 300 μJ/cm², preferably less than 100 μJ/cm2, and apulse width in time of 50 ns or more, preferably 150 ns or more.

The invention shall now be explained in more detail with reference toembodiments and a drawing, in which

FIG. 1 shows a diagram regarding the dependence of the UVradiation-induced birefringence on the energy dose (energy density×pulsenumber) of the radiation;

FIG. 2 a diagram regarding the dependence of the UV radiation-inducedbirefringence (slope of the straight line of FIG. 1) on the hydroxylgroup content of the quartz glass;

FIG. 3 a diagram regarding the dependence of the UV radiation-inducedbirefringence on the pulse number of the radiation in two quartz glassqualities that differ in their fictive temperature;

FIG. 4 a graph for explaining the isotropic and the anisotropic densitychange upon UV radiation.

SAMPLE PREPARATION

A soot body is produced by flame hydrolysis of SiCl₄ with the help ofthe known VAD method. The soot body is dehydrated at a temperature of1200° C. in a chlorine-containing atmosphere and then vitrified at atemperature of about 1750° C. in vacuum (10⁻² mbar) to form atransparent quartz glass blank. This blank is then homogenized bythermally mechanical homogenization (twisting) and formation of a quartzglass cylinder. The quartz glass cylinder has then an OH content ofabout 250 wt ppm.

Sample 1

For reducing stresses and birefringence and for producing acompaction-resistant glass structure, the quartz glass cylinder issubjected to an annealing treatment which is particularly characterizedby its shortness. The quartz glass cylinder is here heated to 1130° C.in air and at atmospheric pressure for a holding time of 8 hours andthen cooled at a cooling rate of 4° C./h to a temperature of 1030° C.and held at this temperature for 4 hours. Thereupon, the quartz glasscylinder is cooled at a higher cooling rate of 50°/h to a temperature of300° C., whereupon the furnace is switched off and the quartz glasscylinder is left to the free cooling of the furnace.

The quartz glass cylinder treated in this way has an outer diameter of350 mm and a thickness of 60 mm. The quartz glass has a mean fictivetemperature of 1035° C. It has been found that the cylinder exhibitsrelatively strong stress birefringence probably due to the rapid coolingfrom the temperature of 1030° C., particularly in its peripheralportions. Part of the overdimension with respect to the componentcontour, namely a thickness of 3 mm, is removed from the faces of thequartz glass cylinder before the next treatment step.

Thereupon, the quartz glass cylinder is held in a pure hydrogenatmosphere at 380° C. first at a pressure of 10 bar for a duration of 22hours and then at a pressure of 0.07 bar for a duration of 816 hours.

The quartz glass cylinder obtained thereafter is substantially free ofoxygen defects and SiH groups (below the detection limit of 5×10¹⁶molecules/cm³), and it is characterized within a diameter of 280 mm (CAarea) by a mean hydrogen content of 2×10¹⁶ molecules/cm³ (outsidethereof about 3.6×10¹⁵ molecules/cm³), a hydroxyl group content of 250wt ppm and a mean fictive temperature of 1035° C. The quartz glass isnot additionally doped with fluorine; the fluorine content is below 1 wtppm.

Sample 2

Another quartz glass cylinder was produced, as described with referenceto sample 1, but hydrogen loading of the quartz glass cylinder tookplace in a pure hydrogen atmosphere in a first process step at 340° C.and at a pressure of 10 bar for a duration of 8 hours, and in a secondprocess step at 340° C. at a pressure of 0.007 bar and for a duration of1570 hours.

The quartz glass cylinder obtained thereafter is essentially free fromoxygen defects and SiH groups (below the detection limit of 5×10¹⁶molecules/cm³), and it is characterized within a diameter of 280 mm (CAarea) by a mean hydrogen content of about 2×10¹⁵ molecules/cm³ (outsidethereof about 3×10¹⁵ molecules/cm³), a hydroxyl group content of 250 wtppm and a mean fictive temperature of 1035° C. The quartz glass is notadditionally doped with fluorine; the fluorine content is below 1 wtppm.

Sample 3

Another quartz glass cylinder was produced, as described above withreference to sample 1, including hydrogen loading, but the annealingtreatment took place with the following heating program: The quartzglass cylinder is heated in air and at atmospheric pressure to 1250° C.for a holding time of 8 hours and is subsequently cooled at a coolingrate of 4° C./h to a temperature of 1130° C., and held at thistemperature for 4 hours. Thereupon, the quartz glass cylinder is cooledat a higher cooling rate of 70° C./h to a temperature of 300° C.,whereupon the furnace is switched off and the quartz glass cylinder isleft to the free cooling of the furnace.

Following hydrogen loading of the quartz glass cylinder, said cylinderis substantially free from oxygen defects and SiH groups (below thedetection limit of 5×10¹⁶ molecules/cm³), and it is characterized by ahydrogen content of 2×10¹⁶ molecules/cm³) and a hydroxyl group contentof 250 wt ppm and a mean fictive temperature of 1115° C.

Sample 4

A soot body is produced by flame hydrolysis of SiCl₄ with the help ofthe known VAD method as explained above. The soot body is dehydrated ata temperature of 1200° C. in a chlorine-containing atmosphere and thenvitrified at a temperature of about 1750° C. in vacuum (10⁻² mbar) toform a transparent quartz glass blank. Due to a more excessivedehydration treatment (compared to the samples 1 to 3), the OH contentis about 120 wt ppm. This blank is then homogenized by thermallymechanical homogenization (twisting) and formation of a quartz glasscylinder as explained above.

Measurement Results

Measurement samples are made from the quartz glass cylinders produced inthis way for determining the resistance of the quartz glass toirradiation with linearly polarized UV excimer laser radiation of awavelength of 193 nm.

A result of this measurement is shown in FIG. 1. For samples 1 and 2birefringence is here plotted in nm/cm on the Y-axis, and a parametercharacterizing the energy of the transmitted UV radiation, namely theproduct following from the energy density of the UV radiation in μJ/cm²and the pulse number, is plotted on the X-axis.

Hence, both in the sample having a low hydrogen content (2×10¹⁵molecules/cm³) and in the sample having a higher hydrogen content(3×10¹⁶ molecules/cm³), birefringence increases approximately linearlywith an increasing product ε×P. The slope of the straight line is hereabout 3.9×10⁻¹³, and it is a measure of the sensitivity of the quartzglass to linearly polarized UV radiation with respect to anisotropicchanges in its density.

Corresponding tests were carried out for further quartz glass sampleswhich have a hydroxyl group content of 30 wt ppm and of about 480 wtppm, respectively, and otherwise correspond to samples 1 and 2. The testresults are summarized in the diagram of FIG. 2. The slope of thestraight line is respectively plotted on the X-axis, as shown forsamples 1 and 2 with reference to FIG. 1. The X-axis shows therespective OH content of the samples in wt ppm.

As can clearly be seen, the slope is strongly scaled with the OH contentsubstantially independently of the hydrogen content of the sample. Thismeans that with an increasing OH content the sensitivity of the quartzglass samples greatly increases with respect to an anisotropic densitychange upon irradiation with linearly polarized laser light radiation ofa wavelength of 193 nm. The corresponding resistance of the quartz glasssamples 1 and 2 (with an OH content of 250 wt ppm) can just be regardedas acceptable. At increased OH contents the sensitivity of the quartzglass with respect to an anisotropic density change is however no longeracceptable. The best resistance was found in the measurement samples ofquartz glass having an OH content of 30 wt ppm.

The diagram of FIG. 3 shows the wavefront distortion indicated as achange in the refractive index based on the distance ΔnL/L in ppb,depending on the pulse number upon irradiation of two different quartzglass samples (sample 1 and sample 3) which differ in their fictivetemperature. These samples were exposed to linearly polarized UVradiation of a wavelength of 193 nm, at a pulse width of 25 ns and anenergy density of 35 μJ/cm² and the wavefront distortion producedthereby was measured from time to time.

As can be seen therefrom, the wavefront distortion passes at anincreasing pulse number after an initially steep rise into a distinctlyflatter rise, the level of the wavefront distortion in sample 3 with thehigh fictive temperature being considerably lower than in sample 1 withthe lower fictive temperature. This demonstrates that the isotropicportion of the density change due to linearly polarized radiationdepends on the fictive temperature of the respective quartz glass, andthat this portion turns out to be lower in the sample having the highfictive temperature than in the sample having the low fictivetemperature.

Optical components made from a quartz glass quality in accordance withsamples 1 to 3 (with a hydroxyl group content around 250 wt ppm) areparticularly suited for use in a projection system of an automaticexposure machine for immersion lithography for the purpose oftransmitting ultraviolet, pulsed and linearly polarized UV laserradiation of a wavelength between 190 nm and 250 nm. Even better resultscan however be expected when the hydroxyl group content is below 200 wtppm, preferably below 125 wt ppm as in sample 4.

First tests for checking the dependence of the anisotropic radiationdamage on the pulse width of the transmitted laser light suggest thatthe quartz glass of the component of the invention has an improvedresistance to pulses with a pulse width of 50 ns (in comparison with apulse width of 25 ns). A further improvement of the radiation resistancewas observed with respect to irradiation with pulse widths of 150 ns.

1. An optical component of quartz glass for transmitting ultravioletradiation of a wavelength in a range of 190 nm to 250 nm, said opticalcomponent comprising quartz glass having a glass structure substantiallywithout oxygen defects, having a hydrogen content ranging from 0.1×10¹⁶molecules/cm³ to 5.0×10¹⁶ molecules/cm³, and having a content of SiHgroups of <less than 5×10¹⁶ molecules/cm³, wherein the quartz glass hasa content of hydroxyl groups ranging from 10 to 250 wt ppm and a fictivetemperature above 1000° C.
 2. The optical component according to claim1, wherein the fictive temperature is above 1050° C.
 3. The opticalcomponent according to claim 1, wherein the content of hydroxyl groupsis in a range of 30 to 200 wt ppm.
 4. The optical component according toclaim 1, wherein the quartz glass has a content of fluorine below 100 wtppm.
 5. (canceled)
 6. (canceled)
 7. (canceled)
 8. (canceled) 9.(canceled)
 10. (canceled)
 11. (canceled)
 12. (canceled)
 13. (canceled)14. (canceled)
 15. (canceled)
 16. The optical component according toclaim 1, wherein the fictive temperature is above 1100° C.
 17. Theoptical component according to claim 3, wherein the content of hydroxylgroups is below 125 wt ppm.